A special legislative session will convene today in Sacramento. All the bills will focus on codifying the federal health overhaul into state law.

The Brown Administration has identified three areas for
lawmakers to consider.

Those include making new rules for private health insurance,
regarding premiums and guaranteeing coverage.

Bills will also seek to change how people become eligible for
and stay on Medi-Cal. And lawmakers will look at options for new
health coverage for people earning up to 200% of the federal
poverty level.

Anthony Wright is from Health Access.

WRIGHT: "Each of these bills by themselves would be historic
changes at any other time, but they're important ingredients to
this overall transformation and improvement of our health care
system."

California Health and Human Services Secretary Diana Dooley says
the special session will help the state stay on track for full
implementation in 2014.

But she says the state must be careful not to make changes the
federal law doesn't require.

DOOLEY: "So that we won't have a circumstance where we enact
some issue related to the individual market that if that were to
change on a federal level we'd have to come back and change
it."

Bills passed in the special session will be enacted 90 days
after the session has ended.